Join me in support of WHY I LOVE HORROR (updated as events are added)

Why I Love Horror: The Book Tour-- Coming to a Library and a Computer and a Podcast Near You [Updated Jan 2026]

RA FOR ALL...THE ROAD SHOW!

I can come to your library, book club meeting, or conference to talk about how to help your readers find their next good read. Click here for more information including RA for All's EDI Statement and info about WHY I LOVE HORROR.

Thursday, February 5, 2026

What I'm Reading: February 2026 Booklist More of Reviews

The February 2026 issue of Booklist contains 4 of my horror reviews. These are also the final reviews I turned in during calendar year 2025, so it feels nice to close the books on last year as well.

Since there are 4 reviews and I had 2 starred reviews and 2 glowing general reviews, I thought I would break them up here over 2 days on the blog. 

As usual, this post contains my draft review and bonus appeal and readalike information along with my three words. 

First up a review of the book that is also today's #HorrorForLibraries giveaway.

Book cover for The Rise: Another Five Tales from The Gulp by Alan Baxter. Click on the image for more information.
The Rise: Tales From The Gulp 3
By Alan Baxter
Feb. 2026. 318p. 13th Dragon, paper, $16.99  (9780645001983); e-book (9798232822330)First published February 1, 2026 (Booklist).

Gulpepper, an isolated harbor town in Australia, known by locals as The Gulp, is not too unlike the small towns horror readers have encountered before (think King’s Castle Rock novels), and yet, in Baxter’s hands the well worn trope is pulsating with terror and life, even as the town itself leads many to their deaths. In this volume of five novellas, the third in a series, Baxter explicitly warns readers that The Gulp is notorious for swallowing people, that there is no hope for these characters which gets readers invested in immediately, and yet, despite that, readers will hold out hope that just this once, it will work out, every single time. “Sunlight on Clear Water,” which follows a young man, new to town, as he meets the girl of his dreams, exemplifies this well. The immersive setting and lingering dread will follow readers off the page and have them asking for more. A great read for the legions of  readers who love to enter sinister small towns full of monsters, both human and supernatural.

Three Words That Describe This Book: Strong Sense of Place, lingering terror, novellas


Further Appeal:

Okay first things first-- if Baxter lived in America he would be more popular here. And specifically these Tales from the Gulp-- 3 books of novellas now-- create a connected mythos for fans of King's Castle Rock. I hope this review in Booklist will encourage libraries to add all three volumes of Tales from the Gulp to their collections.

The set up is easy and one you have heard before-- an extremely haunted and sinister town. Here it is Gulpepper, a small harbor town in Australia. One that locals are used to but that holds forces that will literally eat you alive. Nothing good will happen to you here. And The Gulp is never satisfied.

However, in Baxter's hands, the trope is never stale. We know bad things are going to happen and yet, we keep reading. He makes the reader care about the characters and even hope things will turn out okay this time. EVEN THOUGH WE KNOW THEY WILL NOT. That is some good storytelling. Great sense of places, just the right amount of connected mythos, and excellently drawn characters we care about.

In terms of the specific stories here. The second and fourth are my favorites. The second follows a kid who is new to town and meets the girl of his dreams (but it is The Gulp so...) and the fourth-- when a movie star goes to a retreat to detox and relax but it is in The Gulp. Both are a perfect example of what I say in the paragraph above.

Readalikes: As I said above, if Baxter was American, we would see his books everywhere. Here is how I know-- because I kept thinking of readalikes. here are a few that popped in my head immediately.

Anything by Owl Goingback– his FL books are a perfect match. It by King, We Are Always Tender with our Dead by LaRocca, Any of the Wayward Pines books by Blake Crouch, Hex by Olde Heuvelt, The Haunting of Velkwood by Gwendolyn Kiste, Jackal by Erin Adams And this is just a start.

Again, if you are interested, The Rise is this week's #HorrorForLibraries giveaway.


Mother is Watching
By Karma Brown
Mar. 2026. 320p. Dutton, $29  (9798217045716); e-book (9798217045723)
First published February 1, 2026 (Booklist).

Beginning with a quote from The Picture of Dorian Grey, Brown’s horror debut more than delivers on that ominous foreshadowing with a tale that begins uneasily and steadily builds to all consuming terror. Tilly lives in an America where a virus that decimated the sperm counts of men has greatly altered how people live. The mother of a young daughter, Tilly is still reeling from the loss of her second, but when she is personally called upon to restore a previously thought to be lost painting by a mysterious and macabre artist, Tilly is excited and energized. As she works to free the painting from layers of soot, it quickly becomes apparent that painting is pulsating with life, and the painter herself may be reaching out for Tilly from the beyond grave to take back what she lost, at any cost. Compelling, immersive, and psychologically unnerving, suggest to fans of cursed art horror in the vein of Black Flame by Felker-Martin or surveillance state, fertility horror like Womb City by Tsamaase.

Three Words That Describe This Book: near future dystopia, art horror, psychological horror

Further Appeal: Beginning with more words--  Horror debut by an established author, fertility horror, art restoration, haunted painting, trauma, surveillance state horror, immersive, visceral (paintings were made with blood, fingernails, insect wings), unreliable narrator-- only Tilly. She is all we know. Can't see her husband, friends, kid, mother in law's perspective.

One Before Chapter to set the stage and introduce the reader to the artist-- Charlotte LeClerc who painting Tilly will be restoring for the bulk of this book. The backstory about the artist is haunting, macabre, and as we find out-- threatening. Tilly's mom restored LeClerc's painting, THE CHILD, and now Tilly is doing THE MOTHER. LeClerc died in a fire as she was working on THE MOTHER.

Then we have the "Now" chapters. the action. Everything is in Tilly's point of view, in conversational language, she is clearly telling the reader her story because at the end of a few chapters, she tells us that things are about to get worse-- which in "now" chapters was a bit odd. How can she know that? 

There is an "After" for the ending.

This book has a few too many frames. I think the frame of a near future where floods and fires have changed the world in ways that are hinted at but not explored was not helpful. We could have easily had hey there was a virus, men have compromised sperm counts, that's why there is all this fertility surveillance. Why add in the climate change, fires, storms. There is a big storm at the end but there could have just been a big storm. It takes place in Savannah. They have big storms now.

The intense fertility surveillance and the "supporting" pregnant people and new mothers is not that far off from life now. 

There were also a lot of extraneous details and side plots that did not pay off for the amount of pages needed for them. Some I am like, hmmmm where did that go, others are completely left dangling.

But library patrons will enjoy the immersive horror here. The psychological horror of the painting– is it haunted, is it out to get Tilly, is it moving into the real world, OR is all of this in Tilly's head? Is she so damaged from her life (multiple things) that she is having a complete breakdown? Readers will get caught up in all of it. There is good use of all five senses here to invoke a real sense of unease, anxiety, and eventually all out terror.


There is a lot of great detail about art restoration as well. That was very cool.


I fall on the side of the haunted painting but there is information here for both, especially for when she avoids her therapist friend on purpose towards the end of the book. (Side note, the therapist and her wife are an example of a side story that is developed and then just dropped)


Further Readalikes: Besides the two above, I also thought that readers who enjoyed Bethany Morrow's The Body would also like this. They are nothing in terms to subject, but the appeal is similar.


It Rides a Pale Horse by Andy Marino is another recent artist focused horror story.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

What I'm Reading: February 2026 Booklist Starred Reviews

The February 2026 issue of Booklist contains 4 of my horror reviews. These are also the final reviews I turned in during calendar year 2025, so it feels nice to close the books on last year as well.

Since there are 4 reviews and I had 2 starred reviews and 2 glowing general reviews, I thought I would break them up here over 2 days on the blog. 

Today, the starred reviews. One the Big 5 debut by an extremely popular (and talented) author and the second a nonfiction/film study/memoir by one fo the biggest names in all of fiction.

As usual, this post contains my draft review and bonus appeal and readalike information along with my three words.

Book cover for Wretch by Eric LaRocca. Click on the image for more details.
STAR

by Eric LaRocca
Mar. 2026. 288p. Saga, $28  (9781668070093)
First published February 1, 2026 (Booklist).

Transgressive horror uses visceral details of violence and sex to make readers squirm with extreme discomfort, transfixing them to the disaster unfolding in front of them, refusing to let their attention go, all with the goal to both entertain and force them to sit with hard truths about both the world and themselves. No one does this better right now than Eric LaRocca as they introduce readers to Simeon, struggling to get over the grief of the husband he lost to cancer, seeking out others who can help him connect with his husband’s ghost, at any cost, and introducing the concept of a reverse haunting (the idea that the yearning grief of the living does not allow the dead themselves to rest). Readers are immersed in Simeon’s messy but sympathetic point of view, the uneasy atmosphere enhanced with ephemera like chat transcripts, emails, and captivating stories on message boards, as every detail introduced is laid bare in an unforgettable final scene. Best read in as few sittings as possible, this is an utterly original story that will leave readers transformed. For fans of intense grief horror like Ghost Eaters by Chapman and Linghun by Jiang or anything by Hailey Piper.

Three Words That Describe This Book: grief horror, captivating, transgressive

Further Appeal:

Other words: discomfort (the idea that discomfort means you are alive as wells feeling discomfort literally), reverse haunting, grotesquely beautiful, utterly original, heartbreaking, eye opening, a slap in the face from truth.

Okay, first...I love how LaRocca writes in general and I realize he is not for everyone, but this is his best novel yet. I feel a maturity here in his writing, how the story comes to gather, how all of the details and atmosphere and ephemera-- it all works in tandem enhancing the over all story.

Every detail matters here in a way that LaRocca hasn't pulled it together before. Let me explain that. Like all of his novel length work, LaRocca includes ephemera-- chat transcripts, emails, news paper stories, and in some cases (here included) a short story or two inside a story. Before they added to the atmosphere, world building, and character development more than the plot. BUT HERE-- all of it, every additional piece that is included as part of the story comes to play a part in the plot of the main novel. It enhances it all. There is nothing extra here and yet there is also so much.

This book introduces the concept of a reverse haunting which is when the living cannot let go of their grief so much so that the dead cannot best left alone to rest. Now LaRocca adds some awesome, visceral, and original speculative elements here, but the concept is so thought provoking because it hold so much truth.

LaRooca always writes about the harm we cause those we love and our family-- and this story takes it even further. And all of it is believable. Transgressive horror at its best uses extreme situations, violence, sex, gore, things that make you squirm as a reader-- all of it to make you sit with a hard truth. No one does this better than LaRocca right now. It is so uncomfortable to read and yet readers are transfixed by every word. By the end-- you are thinking about your own life in a new way, with fresh eyes. You feel the horror from his story reverberate off the page, even at its most extreme and outrageous, and it echoes inside of you as a readers.

The best thing LaRocca does in all of his books is here as well-- They bring you right into the story the protagonist, and the world, They seamlessly and effortlessly draw readers in and begins to make you care so that as it gets more squirmy, discomfiting, and intense-- you not only cannot look away-- you don't want to. You are invested and captivated and in for the long haul no matter what the author throws at you. That is quite a skill.


Utterly original worlds that LaRocca is able to allow the reader to fall into them immediately, be physically present for, and invested emotionally– even as we question if we should get invested emotionally.

There are great hints at Simeon's trustworthiness scattered well throughout here. LaRocca's protagonists are always sympathetic but never 100% likable. They are messy and complicated, but ultimately honest. And as the book comes to its conclusion-- that honesty is laid full bare.

The ending is perfect here. Bringing so many details together, enhancing the heartbreak and horror, leaving readers with an image they may never forget. 

All LaRocca books/stories should be read in as few sittings as possible. This one is under 300 pages and if you can do 2 sittings (3 max) you will like it even more.

Not everyone is going to like this book, or any of their stories, but this one is the most complete of his novel length work to date. I will be making this my start with title for LaRocca to all new readers.

Readalikes: Besides the books above don't forget, The Fisherman by John Langan (the gold standard of grief horror). Check out this entire reddit forum on grief horror books as well.


Book cover of Partially Devoured by Daniel Kraus. Click the image for more information.
STAR

Partially Devoured: How Night of the Living Dead Saved my Life and Changed the World

By Daniel Kraus

Mar. 2026. 320p. Counterpoint, $28  (9781640097155); e-book (9781640097162). 791.43. First published February 1, 2026 (Booklist).

New York Times Bestselling author Daniel Kraus loves Night of the Living Dead, but he has never written about it with such heartbreakingly beautiful emotion. Beginning with Kraus talking directly to the reader, helping them to cue up their version of the film to match the time stamps scattered throughout the book, he continues in this conversational style, watching the film with them, pausing to share 360 degrees of detail. To say Kraus takes readers down a rabbit hole is an understatement, one which trivializes the depth at which he probes the movie, the life stories of the humans involved in its creation, its importance in our world, and most importantly, how he would not be the writer, or even human, he is without it. More than the intimate memoir or film study the title proclaims, this is storytelling at its finest. For all readers, whether they have heard of Romero or not, this is a book about America, about death, oozing with grief on every page, while simultaneously bursting with life. An easy suggestion for fans of Cruelly Yours, Elvira by Peterson, but it is more similar to Didion’s unforgettable classic, The Year of Magical Thinking.

Three Words That Describe This Book: conversational style, heartbreakingly beautiful, 360 degrees of detail

Further Appeal: First comment, I would file this in memoir not film study at my library, but it is up to you. What readers think begins as a film study, an argument for the greatness of  Night of the Living Dead morphs over time into an intimate memoir, one that allows the author to process his grief, both personal and for what our country has become.

It all begins with a note on how to cue your version of the film to the book. And then everything is told under the headings of time stamps. Kraus explains what is going on in the scene, including details about the filming, actors, how the scene was created, mistakes in the film (but they are all endearing to Kraus), backstories about the business and all of the sequels inspired works etc.... so much.

This is ultimately a memoir about the author, but it also gives everyone who was a part of the movie, a small chance to live again as well. Kraus digs into


But it is all relayed in a conversational style, as if you are watching this movie alongside him and it is being paused in a scene and then he gives your every bit of minutia about that scene but gets sidetracked into so much more detail. It flows perfectly wether you have seen the movie 100x or like the average American you know the basic outline of the classic movie.

Along the way he is also meticulously leading readers to understand his argument for why this film is so important. I won't spoil it for you. Read the book.

But this is also billed as the story of how a movie about the dead coming back to life taught Kraus how to live, personally, and in this part he does not disappoint. Kraus shares his personal connection to the film (which he has done in other places before) but goes even further to share how it made him the man and artist he is today.

It is a film study, a social study of America through the lens of this film from the moment it came out until today, it is a memoir of a famous author, and it is a grief narrative-- of people lost and not just those Kraus knows personally, of a country lost, of a time lost, of bad luck, mistakes....so much grief. And yet, here Kraus stands, living and making sense of the world through art,

Kraus has had a lot of books that will never be forgotten from Rotters (still a YA classic) to The Shape of Water to Whalefall and now Angel Down, but this is a book that will be read long after he is gone. Fans of the movie will find it and will take the deep dive with him and then, they will find so much more about America, about people, about death, and most importantly, about life.

Readalikes: As I mentioned above, this is a great choice for those who loved Cassandra Peterson's critically acclaimed memoir of her life as Elvira. But, and I am serious here, this is also for fans of Joan Didion's The Year of Magical Thinking. Don't think that because this is about a zombie movie it is not worthy to be compared to that classic. If you have a reader who is not a snob and can just trust you that these two books have so much in common, they will thank you.

Jade Daniels (from My Heart is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones) would love this book. She would weep on the bench with Kraus as the book ends.

And of course don't forget the two novels Kraus has finished for Romero-- The Living Dead and Pay the Piper.

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

The February 2026 Booklist is a Spotlight on History and Historical Fiction (with extra genre resources)

On the Cover From Junie, by Erin Crosby Eckstine, a Top 10 Historical Fiction Debut. Design by Elena Giavaldi, illustration by Sarah Madden. Used with permission from Ballantine.
For the next three days I am going to have posts about the February 2026 issue of Booklist. Today will be about the Spotlight and then since I have 4 reviews in this issue, I will split them up on Wednesday and Thursday. 

Back to today.

The February Spotlight is on History and Historical Fiction. Below I have the current articles and Adult top 10 lists with 5 years easy backlist access. You can use all of the titles from the past 5 years for sure bet suggestions, check the lists and make sure you have these titles in your collections, and why not get up a display of historical fiction. Yes you have a Black History Month display up, but use another surface to also do historical fiction. 

But before I get to those lists, I thought today would also be a good time to remind you all that all Booklist Spotlight issues are not only useful as a resource, but they should also serve as your reminder to get up to speed on those genres. In other words-- let's talk Historical Fiction genre resources!

To help you, here is a list of some of my favorite and go-to resources for Historical Fiction:

  • Your first stop to get in genre shape should always be the RUSA CODES Reading List. Click here to see every list from last week's 2026 announcement back to 2014. Historical Fiction is a category each year.  They pick a genre winner and give it 3 readalikes, plus up to 4 runner up titles. Up to 16 sure bet historical fiction titles each year. When you peruse the last few years, you can see trends as well.
  • The most current Goodreads Reader's Choice results for Historical Fiction are here. And if you scroll down, every list of winners and nominees going back to 2011. Please remember, these are reader driven lists. Yes, many of the titles are not critically acclaimed and the lists tend to be overly white BUT, used in tandem with other resources, you get a sense of what readers have most enjoyed over the last few years in Historical Fiction and you can use that knowledge to suggest readalieks from a wider range of voices.
  • The best place to stay up to date in real time (not just end of the year lists like the first two resources) is Reading the Past. Sarah Johnson is THE authority on Historical Fiction in Libraries. From her bio on the blog

"Collection management librarian, readers' advisor, avid historical fiction reader, NBCC member. Book review editor for the Historical Novels Review and Booklist reviewer. Recipient of ALA's Louis Shores Award for book reviewing (2012). Blogging since 2006."

Now back to Booklist and their February 2026 Spotlight content (with my backlist access added).

Spotlight on History
Essentials: America’s 250th Anniversary
Top 10 History Books
Before, During, and After: The American Revolution
Ears on American History

Spotlight on Historical Fiction
Essentials: The American Revolutionary Era in Fiction, at Home and Abroad
Top 10 Historical Fiction 2026: 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021
Top 10 Historical Fiction Debuts 2026: 2025, 2024 (no list), 2023, 2022
Manga Essentials: Historical Fiction Inspired by Europe
Essentials: Intergenerational Family Sagas
Top 10 Historical Fiction on Audio 2026: 2025, 2024 (no list), 2023, 2022 (no list), 2021

Monday, February 2, 2026

Coming Next Week: Library Lovers Week on EveryLibrary Live!

To start off this new month and week, I have a great virtual option for you to promote to your library patrons (and for yourselves) that is happening NEXT week live but also it will be on demand whenever.

For Library Lovers Week, EveryLibrary Live is once again hosting conversations with popular authors for readers of all ages and all of it is FREE to you. I will be moderating 3 of these conversations. You can see the entire list of content below or with this link.

What is so great about these conversations is that they are not only free but also available on demand anytime. 

Please let you patrons know that they can watch any or all of these conversations whenever they want. 

But for you as a library worker, these are also a great chance to hear about new books by authors from across the literary landscape. Make sure to share this with your youth colleagues as well. You could even pull books by the authors listed below (backlist and new) and make a Library Lovers Week display. 

See below for the full list of events and authors. At the end of this post I have the promotion slides (with full alt text) for my specific events.

With the way the world is right now, we all need to spread the joy and the power of reading. This week will connect your readers to their stories they love. And again, it is all for free.

Maybe I will see some of you there. 

Library Lovers Week 2026

February 9–13, 2026 | 5 PM, 7 PM & 9 PM EDT on Facebook Live and YouTube Live


Join EveryLibrary Live! for Library Lovers Week 2026, a three-night virtual celebration of books, authors, and the libraries that connect readers to stories. Featuring bestselling and award-winning writers across adult, YA, and middle-grade fiction, the event highlights the power of reading, discovery, and access.

With sincere thanks to our publishing and publicity partners: Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, Hachette Book Group, Penguin Random House, W. W. Norton & Company, Kensington, Levine Querido, Ingram, Wunderkind PR, City Owl Press, and Zibby Publishing, whose generous support makes Library Lovers Week possible and helps bring together beloved authors and exciting new voices for readers to discover

12 Live Author Panels • 21 Acclaimed Authors

Each evening features three live conversations designed for readers, librarians, educators, and book lovers of all ages. Library Lovers Week celebrates libraries as essential community spaces that foster lifelong reading, support access, and keep stories alive across generations.


Guest Hosts

Guest hosts Gigi Howard (Drinks in the Library) and Becky Spratford (Librarian advisory and horror author), are joined by Andrew Albanese (Words & Money) along with John Chrastka, founder of EveryLibrary, who leads the conversations with insight, energy, and a deep commitment to libraries.

Featured Author Panels

Monday, February 9th 

5:00 PM EDT — James Ponti & Stuart Gibbs (Simon & Schuster) "Mission: Middle Grade High-Stakes Adventures"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/1637016404389157
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVKmk8ADQzM

7:00 PM EDT — Cheryl W. Thompson (Kensington Publishing) - "The Lost Tuskeege Airmen"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/26409055965345069
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VhmMuyQwuU

9:00 PM EDT —   Justin C. Key  (HarperCollins & Wunderkind PR) - "Healing, Justice, and the Future We Choose"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/834072879684711
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiI1TAqAo7Q

Tuesday, February 10

5:00 PM EDT — C. J. Box (Penguin Random House) - "At the Crossroads: Justice, Family, and the Modern West"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/1547079246345955
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZXIEetx8j-U

7:00 PM EDT — Heather Morris & Francine Prose (HarperCollins) - "Stories That Endure: Empathy, Memory, and the Power of Fiction"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/1427047182204061
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPIkcsancvw

9:00 PM EDT — Colleen Delaney & Amy Woodruff (City Owl Press) - "Spellbinding Stories with Librarian-Authors" 

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/1200283145613246
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-cDR6b4DGM

Wednesday, February 11

5:00 PM EDT — Jamie Sumner & Megan E. Freeman (Simon & Schuster) - "Uncovering Secrets & Finding Strength"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/25472486765756706
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pzHFSZnLnQ

7:00 PM EDT — Donna Barba Higuera & Daniel Nayeri (Levine Querido / Ingram) - "Worlds Beyond, Stories Within"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/1507831193647728
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIo2iznN01U

9:00 PM EDT — Raúl the Third & Kyle Lukoff (Hachette Book Group) - "Big Laughs, Bold Heroes, and Books Kids Love"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/2963491770648653
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h_Eww3Ny5zU

Thursday, February 12

5:00 PM EDT — David Guterson & Naeem Murr (W. W. Norton & Company) - "Lives in Motion: Crossing Borders of Place, Memory, and Belonging"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/1585721749332911
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gp6iI8RJuhk

7:00 PM EDT — Julie Doar & Sarah Sawyer (Zibby Publishing) - "Unraveling the Past"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/895652152872436
YouTube Live: http://youtube.com/watch?v=VMiYpi4akxs

9:00 PM EDT — Janet Skeslien Charles & Sadeqa Johnson (Simon & Schuster) - "Women Who Preserve, Women Who Resist: History, Identity, and the Power of Story"

Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/events/1230979675734232
YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OK7wihxldeI

Thursday, February 12

5:00 PM EDT - Andru Volinsky - The Last Bake Sale - and What It Means for Libraries, Schools, and Higher Ed

Facebook Live:
YouTube Live:


Live + On-Demand Viewing

Watch live on Facebook Live and YouTube Live, or catch every session on demand (perfect for classrooms, libraries, book clubs, or late-night readers).

RSVP & Spread the Word

At a time when access to books is more important than ever, Library Lovers Week puts the focus back where it belongs: on readers, on stories, and on the libraries that make both possible.

Reserve your spot, receive event reminders, and get access to replays. Invite your book club, your students, your patrons, and your fellow library lovers.

When
February 09, 2026 at 5:00pm - February 13, 2026

Promotion slide for Every Library Live, Library Lovers Week Event-- 5:00 PM EDT — Jamie Sumner & Megan E. Freeman (Simon & Schuster) - "Uncovering Secrets & Finding Strength." Moderated by RA for All (me). With heads shots for the authors and my logo. Click on the slide or see the text of this post for all of the details


Promotion slide for Every Library Live, Library Lovers Week Event-- 9:00 PM EDT — Raúl the Third & Kyle Lukoff (Hachette Book Group) - "Big Laughs, Bold Heroes, and Books Kids Love." Moderated by RA for All (me). With heads shots for the authors and my logo. Click on the slide or see the text of this post for all of the details
Promotion slide for Every Library Live, Library Lovers Week Event-- 5:00 PM EDT — David Guterson & Naeem Murr (W. W. Norton & Company) - "Lives in Motion: Crossing Borders of Place, Memory, and Belonging." Moderated by RA for All (me). With heads shots for the authors and my logo. Click on the slide or see the text of this post for all of the details